News Release

Carnegie Mellon's Rob Rutenbar wins Pioneer Award

IEEE 2007 Industrial Pioneer Award

Grant and Award Announcement

Carnegie Mellon University

PITTSBURGH— Rob Rutenbar, the Stephen Jatras Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Carnegie Mellon University received the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers' (IEEE) 2007 Industrial Pioneer Award June 5 at the Design Automation Conference in San Diego. Rutenbar was recognized for his pioneering contributions in developing academic and industrial research tools for commercial applications.

"This award really captures the outstanding contributions Rob Rutenbar has made to circuit design," said Ed Schlesinger, head of Carnegie Mellon's Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE). "His work reflects the innovative thinking and collaborative research so endemic to this university."

Following a decade of work, Rutenbar's research contributed to the development of electronic design automation tools for structural, parametric and layout synthesis of analog-mixed integrated circuits, which are widely used in the semiconductor industry. Analog circuits connect digital computing chips with signals from the outside world; they are critical in applications ranging from high definition televisions to use in cell phones.

With ECE colleague L. Richard Carley, Rutenbar co-founded Neoliner, Inc. in 1977 to commercialize his work. That Pittsburgh start-up was acquired in 2004 by Cadence Design.

"I'm particularly gratified at this recognition by the IEEE, as our technology is now built into the Cadence analog design flow, making it available and familiar to worldwide users," said Rutenbar. "I believe the analog community has seen significant advances based on our work."

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